Try mounting a DMF disk on /dev/fd0 and see if it works. Win95/DOS has no
special support for DMF (hence it can't delete or write to the disk, only
read).
There are actually a few different versions of DMF out there (two or
three). This is because the folks at MS changed the format during the
Win95 beta process.
-Jon
jkatz@in.net President and CEO, Internet Consulting by Jon
Voice: +1 317.823.8221 Fax: +1 317.823.8184
9010 Anchor Bay Drive, Indianapolis, IN 46236
Personal: http://www.in.net/~jkatz
Resume: http://www.in.net/~jkatz/I-need-a-job.html
HOW-TO: http://www.in.net/~jkatz/win95/Linux-HOWTO.html
**
On Tue, 20 Aug 1996, Ron Holt wrote:
> Can Linux read DMF format floppies? DMF is Microsoft's "Distribution Media
> Format". Some of the applications they make are distributed in this floppy
> format. I don't know the exact geometry of these floppies. I've been
> told it's something like 21 instead of 18 sectors per track. Does anyone
> know where I can find a spec for DMF?
>
> Thanks,
> Ron
>
> PS. Yes, I've looked at floppy.c in the kernel source...
>
> --
> Ron Holt <ron@caldera.com> Caldera, Inc.
>
>
> From owner-linux-kernel-outgoing@vger.rutgers.edu Tue Aug 20 01:22:53 1996
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> Date: Tue, 20 Aug 1996 07:55:57 +0200 (SAT)
> From: Mike Kilburn <mike@conexio.co.za>
> To: Pedro Roque Marques <roque@di.fc.ul.pt>
> Cc: Olaf Titz <olaf@bigred.inka.de>, linux-kernel@vger.rutgers.edu
> Subject: Re: Networking stalls: More details
> In-Reply-To: <199608192138.WAA13335@oberon.di.fc.ul.pt>
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>
> >
> > Olaf> I'm skeptical if stacking retransmitting protocols is
> > Olaf> capable of doing more good than harm at all...
> >
>
> This is true when point-point retransmitting protocols are stacked,
> not when end-end protocols are stacked on point-point. For example:
> when reliable PPP (effectively LAP-B) is running thru a modem doing LAP-M.
> The retransmit times are very close and this is where the problem comes
> in. The PPP will retransmit while the LAPM is filling the window (the REJ
> got lost), then LAPM will retransmit. OTOH, end-end protocols have *much*
> larger timeouts so the link level retransmits just looks like a stalled/
> congested link.
>
>
>